The state’s highest-ranking Democratic member of the House education panel, State Rep. Teresa Fedor (D-Toledo), today called for a clean and independent investigation into allegations of attendance fraud at the Ohio Virtual Academy (OHVA).

In May of this year, Fedor and House Education Committee Chairman Bill Hayes (R-Harrison Township) forwarded documents from an anonymous whistleblower showing what appeared to be an attendance scrubbing scheme at OHVA, in which the online school received more state tax dollars by seemingly padding its rolls with chronically truant students.

“It is obvious that we hit a nerve and potentially upset OHVA’s gravy train when we took allegations of attendance fraud seriously and forwarded them to the proper authorities,” said Fedor. “It later became apparent that the man in charge of reviewing these complaints for the state was tainted and in-bed with the industry during the time of the supposed review. That is why we deserve a clean and independent investigation into these allegations, one that will finally provide real answers for parents, taxpayers and students.”

The same group that has a vested interest in OHVA – its sponsor, the Ohio Council of Community Schools – was permitted by the Ohio Department of Education’s then-charter chief, David Hansen, to conduct the “investigation,” with Hansen signing off on the findings. Republican State Auditor David Yost, who was requested by Fedor and Hayes to investigate, has yet to acknowledge whether he will look at the complaint.

“This is David versus Goliath in the fight for our children’s future. We have a one-billion dollar industry that hasn’t been playing by the same rules as other schools for years, and that has emboldened some bad actors. The gravy train is about to end, and they’re scared. All we have to do is follow the money,” Fedor added.

Fedor also today joined the growing chorus for the state’s education agency to release public records created from the charter school grade scrubbing scandal that brought about the resignation of Ohio’s top charter school official, David Hansen. The scandal also drew calls for State Superintendent Dick Ross to resign.

A copy of Fedor’s public records request is attached.

August 27, 2015

Dr. Richard A. Ross

Superintendent of Public Instruction

25 South Front Street

Columbus, Ohio 43215-4183

Dear Superintendent Ross:

I write today to formally request public documents under ORC 149.43 related to the scrubbing of charter school sponsor evaluation data.

This request includes any e-mails to and from Mr. David Hansen, former School Choice Director, regarding the process Hansen used when evaluating Ohio charter school sponsors.

Newspaper reports indicate that the Ohio Department of Education has already reviewed these relevant records, but have refused to fulfill similar public records requests from the media.

State Reps. John Rogers (D-Mentor-on-the-Lake) and Nathan Manning (R-North Ridgeville) today announced the concurrent passage of House Bill 497, which prohibits the nonconsensual dissemination of private sexual images, often referred to as “revenge porn,” by setting penalties to punish those who distribute sexually explicit images with the intent to harass the victim.

House Democrats raised concerns today as Republican-sponsored House Bill (HB) 393 passed the House. The bill would allow one Ohio company to sell brine from certain oil and gas production to Ohio consumers for personal use. Democrats questioned the impact the sale and use of radioactive brine would have on health and the environment.

The Republican-controlled Ohio House today passed House Bill (HB) 258, legislation that would prohibit an abortion once a fetal heartbeat is detected, which could be as early as six weeks of pregnancy— long before most women even know they are pregnant.

State Rep. Stephanie Howse (D-Cleveland) today released the following statement after being gaveled down and having her microphone cut while giving an impassioned speech on the consequences Stand Your Ground legislation has had on minority communities: